Chloë Sevigny, on prints, and her latest Opening Ceremony collection: "Very Natalie Merchant, you know? It has this timeless, alterna-girl look. I still dress like how I did as a senior in high school, but with a higher heel." [DFR]

Anna Wintour went to a community board meeting to protest the planned opening of a Jamaican restaurant in her West Village neighborhood. "This is a unique historic neighborhood. I'm also concerned for the safety of the kids here," she said. Wintour continued, "I would like everyone who wants to vote against this project to raise their hand." A board member shouted, "You can't do that!" but since when has that ever worked with her? Someone in the audience called out, "but we can clap," — "and," reports the Daily News, "they did with gusto." [NYDN]

Cindy Crawford's 8-year-old daughter told her mom that she wanted to be a dancer, a singer, or a teacher when she grows up. "But she [also] said something really funny," continued the supermodel. "She's like, 'But maybe I'll model first, because you don't need any special skills.'" [The Cut]

Lady Gaga's back-up dancers wore Armani in the "Alejandro" video. The black outfits with red armbands will be available in Armani stores — for bajillions of dollars — next season. [DFR]

Thom Browne is adding women's wear to his signature collection. He's already done made-to-measure women's clothes, but this fall, his women's suits will be stocked at Barney's, Colette in Paris, and 10 Corso Cuomo in Seoul. No pricing information is yet available. [WWD]

And meanwhile Net-A-Porter is getting into the men's wear business. It's men's site will be called Mr. Porter. [Telegraph]

The New York Times thinks calling the resort season "Resort" is "outdated"; writer Eric Wilson uses "early spring" throughout this piece instead. Stella McCartney agrees, but prefers simply "spring." That seems likely to confuse, what with there already being a season called "spring/summer." [NYTimes]

Zac Posen may think New York doesn't understand his main collection — he's decamped to Paris for the spring season — but this city is apparently good enough for his cheaper secondary line, Z Spoke. Fabulous. [WWD]

Gee, all these ridiculous pseudo-high-tech airbrush/roller/micro-oscillator foundation thingamajiggers sound like they A) are expensive and B) are complicated and C) don't work. [NYTimes]

"People swollen with fat look like giant babies, the lines and wrinkles pressed from their faces." Could Alex Kuczynski actually be the Times' most hateful writer? Or just its stupidest? It's hard to tell sometimes. [T]

Rich women who buy designer clothing, never wear it, and re-sell it online or in consignment shops for pennies on the dollar are idiots. And yet we reap all the benefits of their profligacy. So, uh, carry on privileged ladies (especially you with the size 10 feet). [WSJ]

Ferrari has made a watch. It costs £250,000, only 60 exist in the world, and you must already own a Ferrari to buy it. [Guardian]

We've come to mistrust these Marc-Jacobs-and-Lorenzo-Martone-are-splitting-up rumors after one too many trips round the gossip maypole. But if you're curious, there's a new one, involving a supposed makeout with a "mystery man." [NYDN]